Nobody supporting ‘IT unions’, people who go with them will never get jobs: Mohandas Pai

Nobody supporting ‘IT unions’, people who go with them will never get jobs: Mohandas Pai

Rubbishing reports indicating widespread job losses in the slowdown-hit IT industry, the former Infosys CFO said that there is no crisis of jobs in the industry and that people going away is just part of normal attrition

Mohandas Pai said people approaching jobs will not get jobs anywherePhoto:PTI

Rubbishing reports indicating widespread job losses in the slowdown-hit IT industry, former Infosys CFO Mohandas Pai has said that there is no crisis of jobs in the industry and that people going away is just part of normal attrition.

"All these news are exaggerated. All these fears of job losses, people going away are exaggerated. There is no crisis. It's part of normal attrition. Yes, every year the bottom 1-2 per cent (non-performers) are asked to go.

"If you look at data, there is nothing extraordinary happening about job losses. Why should anybody have sympathy for person (non-performers who are laid off) who is not working?" Pai, Chairman of Aarin Capital Partners, said.

Pai, who is currently the Chairman of Manipal Education Global Services, did however say that jobs would be hard to come by in the IT sector in future for youngsters who have only B Tech degree, and companies would prefer to hire post-graduates with specialised expertise.

"My advice to all the people in colleges: please do M Tech and specialise, and learn coding on your own by taking extra classes, because in future most companies will hire you based on your coding knowledge.

"They are not going to catch you raw and give you training for six months and pay for it. Why should they waste their time? They will test you on your coding skills and if you know very good coding, they will hire you," Pai told PTI.

"In future if you want to have a job, you must have M Tech, you must know coding and you must be an expert. You must have some level of expertise," he said.

When asked about salary of freshers not growing in the Information Technology (IT) industry in the past two decades, Pai termed it as a "great tragedy". This is because the whole industry is not growing at a fast pace, he said.

"Supply (the number of software engineers) has gone up, (but commensurate) demand is not there," said Pai, who is currently chairman of Manipal Global Education Services

Global spending in IT is projected to grow only two per cent this year, a figure which was 3-4 per cent earlier. "That is also having an impact," he said.

IT industry is expected to hire 1.5 lakh to 1.6 lakh people this year, he said.

"No economy in the world can absorb one million engineers (who come out of colleges in India every year)... nowhere in the world, not even China can absorb. It's too much," he said.

Some reports indicate that as against offers of Rs 2.25 lakh per annum that used to go out for freshers two decades ago, they have risen only to Rs 3.5 lakh now, which suggests a decrease in real wages from an inflation-adjusted perspective.

Pai had said earlier this year that big IT services companies in India have "come together and talking to each other not to increase" the salary of freshers taking advantage of oversupply of software engineers at the entry level.